April 29, 2008
Fail Meme
April 26, 2008
Thoughts on Obama
As anyone who has been reading my other blog for any length of time knows, I'm in the bag for Obama. Hell, if I was hot and female, I'd give Obama girl a run for her money.
OK, that's a bit of tragic hyperbole, but you get where I'm coming from, I'm sure.
As I write this, I'm no less pro-Obama (Probama?) than ever before, but I do have some problems. Not with him, necessarily, more likely his message handlers.
Here's the thing (and I'm about to get all wonky on you, kind of)... Obama is straight-up post-materialist. And that's cool. Plus, I'm pretty much post-materialist, too, so it's real cool.
Enough.
Post-materialist is just a fancy-schmancy way of saying that he is concerned with all the kinds of things people are concerned with when times are good. You know, when food is on the table, everyone is employed, the nation is relatively at peace. (This country is hardly ever at peace, if you think about it, so we have to approach this thing relatively.) Anyway, point is, when times are good, we stop worrying about the basics and start opening our minds and wallets to other things less directly pressing. No pressing job issues? Let's fix the environment then. No crazy violent crime rate? Let's help the homeless then. No problems with inflation? Let's do campaign finance reform. And so on and so on. Reasonable, right? Right.
Problem is, shit is not comfy right now, and it is getting less comfy by the day. It is still pretty ok for the youth (who don't have to worry about mortgages yet) and the well-educated (because they are usually on pretty solid financial ground). Surprise, surprise - I just named 2/3 of Obama's base. The other 1/3, African-Americans, are as bad off as anyone else, but supporting Obama isn't about post-materialism, it is about history and identity and, yes, hope. And sometimes that stuff is as important as anything else.
Hillary is definitely not a post-materialist. I don't think she's capable of it, even if times were great (which they are decidedly not). She's had a bunker mentality since high school (if not birth) and such a worldview does not usually allow oneself to focus on the less immediate things. This is why I'd really like her in the Senate, as a leader, fostering change for a long time to come.
My guy Barack has plenty of policy details to offer, not just on his webpage but in every stump speech he delivers. Focusing on his policy details just doesn't fit with the media's stereotype of his candidacy, so it doesn't make the news, but that's another complaint for another time.
So where am I going with all this? Honestly, I don't know. Mostly just trying to say I wish my candidate would take a step back, realize that the political landscape has changed dramatically since he launched his bid last year, and recalibrate his pitch. He's got all the right positions, he just needs to change the way he lets people know.
He's the candidate of change, which is great and necessary. We want transformation and we desperately need it. But right now people really need to keep their houses and feed their kids and put gas in the tank and get their cousins and sons and fathers home alive from wars abroad.
It is possible to have both, but you have to speak to both. Obama's gone from rhetoric of transformation to rhetoric of electoral calculation (i.e., why HRC can't win). He's as right today as he's ever been, but it wasn't the rhetorical switch he needed to make. He needs to adopt a rhetoric of problem solving, and he can do so without being crass or pandering. All he needs to do is talk about his ideas.
I hope he and his advisors aren't too hooked on the hubris it seems they've been caught on of late to make this change. It'd be a damn shame if we ended up with a lesser leader cause he/they couldn't read the tea leaves.
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April 24, 2008
Why Aren't We Talking About the Food Crisis?
Jimmy and I were talking in the hallway yesterday about the food crisis and the end of Empire. We ran into another of our colleagues and asked him what he thought, but he hadn't heard about the food shortages or the food riots. Sigh. I don't think that the U.S. MSM has paid nearly enough attention to this issue. Why not?
And, is it all caused by rising gas prices or are there other factors?
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April 23, 2008
Three Un-related Things
1. I had a dream last night in which I yelled at Hillary Clinton severely for not being nicer to my pregnant friend. I accused her of not being a real woman, among other things. WTF?
2. How do I get on this list? And, I'm sad to say that I don't know anyone on it personally. Can we start a facebook for that?
3. I'm confused about where Obama wins and electoral maps. What do you think that it means that he tends to win in the big cities (typically where Democrats win), but not so much in the country/suburbs. Does that mean that "true" Democrats like Obama better and more centrists like Clinton? But, I thought that Obama was getting all the new Dems and the Independents and the cross-over Republicans. Very confusing. What am I missing? Please don't say that the "urban vote" is the minority vote--I mean, is that what it is??
Please discuss.
ps: When is spellcheck going to learn how to spell Obama?? Jeez.
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April 16, 2008
Bitter Battle Blog
A lot of buzz has been raised over Barack Obama’s recent comments about small-town voters. The initial reaction was merely the public being called a name that they didn’t like. Voters like him to tell the truth, but start to get shifty when it pertains to them. Polls numbers show, however, that this offense didn’t take for long . His recent misstep shows how out of touch he is with the image of perfection that the media has built him up to be – and how he can relate to us normal-folk.
This is nothing new, especially to the blogosphere, mainstream media, or news sources.
The voters have moved on from this issue. Hillary never got the bump in the polls she was expecting, Obama is still gaining or holding ground in Pennsylvania (depending on what poll you look at), and the superdelegates aren’t moving. Without political gains on the issue, you would think that the story would be dead.
But it continues. We’ve had apologies before and we’ve had stories go on infinitely longer than they should have. This conversation is no longer about the content of the comment, however. It’s a game: how many entendres can we come up with “Bitter”? Now, don’t get me wrong – there have been some good ones. My favorite has been “Guns and Bitter”. They range from “Bitter Battle” to “Bitter-Sweet Symphony”. The most recent stories are how inconsequential these comments have been on the race at large.
I can’t help but feel that the continued frenzy over this issue is fueled by the plays on words that continue to plague articles. A new pun comes to mind, and someone on the tail end of the spin cycle contributes with an analogy of Obama trying to swallow a “bitter pill”. I’ve done my part to keep it going, too, with my own variation from the “Butter Battle Book”. Language has a powerful hold on this election. The level of political discourse in this country is higher than at any point in my lifetime, and I give much of the credit to Barack Obama’s powerful speeches that inspire a nation. It’s just a bit depressing to see this debasement of language by the infotainment (read: news) industry.
Now, I like puns as much as the next guy. Plays on words are the epitome of my sense of humor. But when language is stretched to the brink of uselessness merely for the sake of using another bad entendre, it creates a blasé attitude towards language in general – and I can’t afford to go through another era of “common” language.
It's not my fault. I guess the media has just made me bitter.
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April 14, 2008
Build it, They Will Come
Political Cotton Candy is new, very new. In fact, PCC is so new that many of its co-bloggers have not yet written a blog post. Perhaps they are waiting to find out what particular lacuna we fill? Behold, the Google search strings that lead our many, many readers to find us:
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2.17% how did cotton candy improve peoples lives?
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2.17% john walnuts! mccain
Notice any themes?
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April 7, 2008
When/Why Ideas are Political
Stanley Fish has a great essay in the NYT in response to the soon to be published “French Theory: How Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze, & Co. Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States” by Francois Cusset.
It looks like a great book to introduce graduate students to the history of ideas. Anyone plan to read it?
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April 3, 2008
I'm a "Manson Libertarian"
I can't tell if that Gravel Video Jen linked to is an elaborate inside joke or not.
For the Libertarian Party, the Ron Paul newsletters were such a big deal, both on the left, where it confirmed their darkest (and most gleeful) imaginations, as well as for the libertarians themselves, who were worried about what was being advertised as part of a Libertarian Agenda. For me, I enjoyed seeing the newsletters' engagement with the Michigan Militia mentality:As early as December 1989, a section of his Investment Letter, titled "What To Expect for the 1990s," predicted that "Racial Violence Will Fill Our Cities" because "mostly black welfare recipients will feel justified in stealing from mostly white 'haves.'" Two months later, a newsletter warned of "The Coming Race War," and, in November 1990, an item advised readers, "If you live in a major city, and can leave, do so. If not, but you can have a rural retreat, for investment and refuge, buy it." In June 1991, an entry on racial disturbances in Washington, DC's Adams Morgan neighborhood was titled, "Animals Take Over the D.C. Zoo." "This is only the first skirmish in the race war of the 1990s," the newsletter predicted. In an October 1992 item about urban crime, the newsletter's author--presumably Paul--wrote, "I've urged everyone in my family to know how to use a gun in self defense. For the animals are coming."
Say what you will, but it is interesting how Anti-Welfare State rhetoric and racism compliment each other so well; this marriage wasn't a shotgun one. More to the point, if this sounds like Charles Manson, it should:
The murders perpetrated by Charles Manson and members of his Family were inspired in part by Manson's prediction of Helter Skelter, an apocalyptic war he believed would arise from tension over racial relations between blacks and whites. This "chimerical vision," as it was termed by the court that heard Manson's appeal from his conviction for the Tate-LaBianca killings, involved reference to music of The Beatles and to the New Testament's Book of Revelation.
Manson had been predicting racial war for some time before he used the term Helter Skelter His first use of the term was at a gathering of the Family on New Year's Eve 1968. This took place at the Family's base at Myers Ranch, near California's Death Valley...
On August 8, 1969, the day Manson instructed his followers to carry out the first of two sets of notorious murders, he told the Family, "Now is the time for Helter Skelter."
So the Libertarian Party had a bit of a Helter Skelter problem in 2008, one could say. And in case you didn't hear, Mike Gravel is now running for the Libertarian Nomination (and may very well get it). Maybe he wants race war cred?
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Clinton Understands Aristotle
I wonder if rhetorical scholars might descibe the difference between Clinton and Obama's rhetorical style as the difference between Aristotle and Gorgias (at least from Clinton's framing). How has Obama attempted to frame the differences between he and Clinton? Could we say that he positions himself as Demonsthenes? If so, does Demonsthenes trump Aristotle? Or, anyone else have a more apt comparison?
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April 2, 2008
Helter Skelter: Mike Gravel, Libertarian for President
My dear friend Jim Aune posted this over at Blogora, I thought y'all might be interested in it here at PCC too. Feel free to discuss...
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March 30, 2008
The Brazos County Democratic Convention

Attending the Brazos County Democratic Convention was one of the most interesting learning experiences of my life. I probably learned more about politics yesterday than I have in my many years of study, volunteering, and activism and while the day was long, tiring, and frustrating at times, I'm very happy that I was there.
1. Observation: County Conventions are organized chaos.
The Brazos County Democratic leadership certainly planned as well as they could for the convention, but the day was chaotic anyway. We stood in lines to check in, we stood in another line to get a name tag. We couldn't figure out where we were supposed to sit. We couldn't figure out who was supposed to be there for our precinct. I don't even want to talk about the Platform discussion we had for the last 2 hours. There were 399 confused people packed into one elementary school gym for about 8 hours yesterday.
Lesson:
Bring your patience and your good humor with you to the convention because you're going to need it. I must admit that after about 7 hours I lost both my patience and my good humor. My losing my patience resulted in my being called an elitist academic who sits next to the microphone to prevent democracy by one angry Clinton Delegate (ouch!). Some people complained, some people yelled, but most of the people at our convention seemed to be committed to seeing the process through and did so with as much thoughtfulness as they could muster.
2. Observation: Pay attention to the Details.
From the very beginning of the day it was apparent to me that I was going to have to fight to make sure that things happened fairly in my precinct. When we left the caucus on March 4, 2008 we had elected 7 Obama Delegates and 7 Alternates and 5 Clinton Delegates and 5 Alternates because Obama had won our precinct about 60/40. When I showed up yesterday there were 7 Clinton Delegates seated on the floor and only 2 Obama Delegates--and one of them had to leave to go to a wedding. Thankfully, we had 4 or 5 Alternates waiting to take the place of the missing Delegates, but we had to get rid of the extra Clinton Delegates so that our Alternates could be seated. This was crucial because getting our full Delegate slate seated would mean the difference between an Obama Delegate going to State or a Clinton Delegate going to State; therefore, I judged that it was worth fighting for.
I got a lot of advice and help from Alma who seemed to be working with the Obama campaign (thanks!). She told me how to protest the Clinton Delegates and get my Alternates seated and gave me the all-important list of all the precincts and Delegates, which I kept and used to our advantage for the rest of the day. (As an aside, I don't know why I took charge of all of this, but I saw the problem and just wanted to fix it. My fixing this problem made some people very angry and made me some good friends within my Delegation)
All we could do was wait after we made the protest to the Credentials Committee, so I made sure that the Alternates knew what was happening and knew to stick around because they were going to be Delegates just as soon as we stopped the Clinton shenanigans. I'm not exactly sure who was responsible or why there were 7 Clinton Delegates seated from our Precinct, but I can tell you that my precinct is full of seemingly very powerful, old-school party members, a good number of whom ended up being selected as At-Large State Delegates by the secret Selection Committee. (I'm not sayin, I'm just sayin). In any case, after a few hours (yes, hours!) we finally got all of our Delegates and Alternates seated and they kicked out 2 Clinton Delegates (whew!)
Lesson:
If no one had paid attention to the seated Delegate problem, then Clinton would have had an unfair advantage at the Convention. Therefore, you have to pay attention to the details because whether the mistake was intentional or not, it could have cost us our Obama Delegate to the State Convention. They could have nullified the Precinct vote with their shenanigans on the floor, but I was determined that they would not be able to. I made a ton of enemies by pushing this issue (and got yelled at and called a cheater), but I'm happy that I did it. Fair is fair.
3. Observation: Politicking is Hard and Unpleasant.
I didn't really know what I was doing, but thankfully a kind fellow Precinct 13 Obama Delegate knew everything and coached me throughout the day. He knew that when it came to our Precinct Caucus (in which we choose our Delegate and Alternate) that we would need to vote as a block and he encouraged me to put my name forward as the Delegate and told me to talk to people to try to get their support. I have to admit that I really, really wanted to be selected as the Obama Delegate, but I didn't feel very comfortable "campaigning" for myself. In the end I let everyone know that I wanted to be the Delegate, but I didn't make arguments for why they should support me until the Caucus at the end of the day when we all got to make short speeches. I merely kept working for the group and hoped that they would see that I was dedicated and that I would work hard for everybody; I hoped that they would use their own observations about me to make their voting decision. I also tried to make it clear that the most important thing was that we got an Obama Delegate elected, so whomever we agreed upon should be the Delegate. Yet, I sort of acted as the leader all day, which probably helped my chances at getting elected (see below about my clipboard).
About half-way through the day we found out that our Precinct would not get to choose its own Delegate and Alternate, but rather we were combined with Precincts 70a, 70b, 64, 67, 62, and 29. The rule should have been that since we had 12 Delegates and 12 Alternates that we would get to send our own Delegate to State, but somehow Precincts were combined (by some controversial magic formula) and our 12 Delegates were now combined with 10 others. Ug, I had to start the campaigning process all over again, except for this time I couldn't just show these folks that I was working on their behalf because they weren't technically in my group and so I wasn't really working for them like I was working for my group.
This is where numbers became crucial. Once again my trusty knowledgeable advisor helped me to understand what I needed to do: I needed to use my secret list to find out how many people were in each of the other Precincts with us and how many of those broke down for Clinton and how many for Obama. (Others consulted my secret list too once they knew that I had it) Upon examination it appeared as though there were 25 Delegates total: 15 Obama and 10 Clinton, but we realized that those were only ideal numbers, we had no idea if all of the Delegates had showed up for each Precinct and we knew that Delegates could technically change their votes once they got there. Our Precinct had 7 Obama Delegates, all of whom were now committed to vote for me (thanks guys!) so we almost had the majority of the 15 ideal Obama Delegates, but I needed one more. My advisor advised me to go campaigning.
I wasn't very successful at the campaigning, but I did find out that there were two other Delegates who wanted to go to State. Now what to do? I hoped that my Precinct would vote for me, but I had no idea what anyone else would do and I didn't want to divide the Caucus (we had to get our entire Delegation to vote together to over power the Clinton Delegation, otherwise we were afraid that if we divided that they would send a Clinton Delegate to State). I just figured that I would count on the Obama Delegation to make the best choice and I tried to think of something good to say when it came to my time to say why I wanted to be the Delegate during the Caucus.
The Caucus was very, very tricky. The Clinton people were angry from the beginning (perhaps because I had forced them to unseat 2 of their Delegates?). It was loud and hot and we had been there for at least 5 hours by that point. The 6 Precincts met (oh, forgot to mention, there was no Precinct 64, we found out) and I moved that we hold our meeting outside where it was cooler and quieter. This was judged a bad idea (and perhaps another one of my tricks!) by the Clinton Delegation and the idea was rejected. We nominated a Caucus Chair (our Precinct Captain, a Clinton Delegate) and someone asked who wanted to go to State. One Clinton Delegate raised her hand as did two Obama Delegates, me and an elderly man from Precinct 67. We were each given a minute or so to make a speech. Clinton Delegate went first and read from a paper, I couldn't hear her. I went next and said something about my background, experience, and why I supported Obama. The man from Precinct 67 went next and while I couldn't hear him very well, I could hear him say that he had been a life-long Democrat and that this was his only and last chance to go to State and that he really had hoped to go. I almost withdrew my candidacy right there because I felt like he should get to go, but I wanted to go too, so I didn't. Who knows if that was the right thing to do or not?
Now the Clinton Delegation wants to vote immediately, but the Obama Delegation wants to talk it over separately. Our decision is tricky and we have to get it right. We can't just vote. Now that we know that we have two candidates we have to decide as a group how to vote. The Clinton Delegation is angry. We are cheating, they say; there are no separate caucuses, they say. They may be right, what do I know? But, I follow the lead of my helpful advisor/campaign manager who is totally in charge of the caucus (he's a lawyer with 50 years of experience in the Democratic Party, by the way). Now we meet about 3 feet away from the Clinton Delegation and someone asks for a show of hands: who will vote for me and who will vote for the man from Precinct 67? We have 15 Obama Delegates and 10 show their hands for me (wow, that felt nice!), so it's settled.
Except for it isn't. What did that mean that we just did that? Some people say that means we all vote for me, some think we should split the vote. Now, another woman says that she wants to be the Alternate, although she didn't make a speech when the rest of us did. (I think she thought that those speeches were for the Delegate and we would do it again for the Alternate?) In any case, I count the number of Clinton Delegates and I argue that we've got 15 and they've got 7, so we could have 8 people vote for me (yay!) and use the other 7 to force a run-off between their Clinton Delegate and our second Obama Delegate. Our 15 votes in the run-off would ensure that we get both the Delegate and the Alternate. Makes sense, right? Jeez, I might be good at this after all. The advisor/campaign manager lawyer leader argues that we don't need to worry about the Alternate. We just need to get the Delegate and the Delegate needs to show up to State and then the Alternate stays in the stands and gets no votes. So, the group follows his argument and we decide not to press for the Alternate position. This decision is made rather quickly and was lamented by some of the folks after it was all done. I'm still not sure whether or not we made the right choice there.
Now, Clinton and Obama sub-Caucuses get back together and we vote. Everyone gets only one vote and the top vote getter is the Delegate and the second is the Alternate. 14 hands go up for me, 7 for Clinton Delegate, and 1 for man from Precinct 67. I am declared the Delegate, but before I can enjoy my little (hard fought!) victory Man from Precinct 67 comes over and yells at me severely. I rigged it all. I cheated. I am not a good person, he bellows. Right behind him is the woman who wants to be the Alternate. She said something in anger too, but I don't know what it was because I was stunned first by my selection, then by getting yelled at, and then by her follow up. I blinked back tears while 4 or 5 very nice Obama ladies told me that I was ok and that I had done good and I shouldn't listen to them. I think I received about 4 comforting hugs. Whew, it was over. We had a Delegate and an Alternate.
I received many handshakes, hugs, and congratulations. Everyone wants to make sure that I will go and I'm urged to work as hard for them at State as I did at the County Convention. Emails are exchanged. I promised to be there (I have a hotel room booked already, I say, I'm goin!) and I tell them about Political Cotton Candy. I hope that they are reading this now, in fact. I will keep reporting what I see, hear, and think for y'all. I'm honored to work on your behalf and Gobama! One woman touched me more than the rest when she told me how much Obama winning would mean to her; I'll have her in mind while I'm fighting it out at State.
Lesson:
Politicking is not for the weak. You have to know what you want, know how to get it, pursue it single-mindedly, and at all costs. No wonder party politics is so messy and bitter. I can see why people have the mindset that the ends justify the means. Thankfully I didn't knowingly do anything questionable, but I did follow the lead of my advisor and I really don't know if it was appropriate for us to have a sub-caucus and I know that that sub-caucus made all of the difference in our choice because it allowed us to form a winning strategy. If this is how it really is on such a small scale, can you imagine what national politics is like? It must be really ugly.
4. Observation: If you want people to think that you're a leader, then act like a leader.
When I packed up my bag for the County Convention I considered my needs carefully: hoodie in case it was cold, bottle of water, yogurt, laptop in case I could live-blog, phone, phone charger, paper, clipboard, and pen. In retrospect the single best decision that I made all day was to pack that clipboard. I don't know why, but when you carry a clipboard people think that you're official and they let you make decisions and ask you for information and give you lists of precints and Delegates. I think that in a confusing situation like the County Caucus any kind of indicator of status or proficiency allows you to act as the leader. Relatedly, when you actively work for the best interests of your group (filing objections to seating arrangements, keeping people informed, reassuring people that you're working on the problems, coordinating meeting procedures, etc), then people let you work for them. Being a leader means that people trust you to work for them.
Lesson:
Being a leader means that you have the privilege and the obligation to do your best for the members of your group. I hope that my fellow Delegates (both Clinton and Obama) from Precincts 13, 70a, 70b, 67, 62, and 29 will keep reading this blog and will freely comment and tell me what they think we need to do. I'll do my best to make it happen. And, fyi, I'm totally bringing my clipboard to the State Convention.
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(Re-Post From Founder-Chic) The Texas Two Step, March 4, 2008
I'm going to write about my experience at the County Convention soon, but I wanted to re-post this from Founder-Chic about the Precinct Caucus last March 4, 2008 in case anyone might be interested.




